[Veritas-vx] Time of snapshot creation

2007-09-18 Thread przemolicc
Hello, we are using VxFS snapshots: /usr/sbin/mount -F vxfs -o snapof ... Having such snapshot how can I check what time was it created ? Regards przemol -- http://przemol.blogspot.com/ -- To takie proste - użyj

[Veritas-vx] Usetype swap removed ?

2007-09-18 Thread Sebastien DAUBIGNE
Hi, Trying to make a volume with swap usetype triggers the following error on VxVM 4.0 MP2 : # vxassist -g g3700 maxsize usetype=swap VxVM vxassist ERROR V-5-1-752 No volume can be created within the given constraints Same command with fsgen usetype works fine : # vxassist -g g3700 maxsize

Re: [Veritas-vx] Usetype swap removed ?

2007-09-18 Thread A Darren Dunham
# vxassist -g g3700 maxsize usetype=swap VxVM vxassist ERROR V-5-1-752 No volume can be created within the given constraints Same command with fsgen usetype works fine : # vxassist -g g3700 maxsize usetype=fsgen Maximum volume size: 2239895552 (1093699Mb) Should I conclude that the

Re: [Veritas-vx] Usetype swap removed ?

2007-09-18 Thread Ronald S. Karr
The swap usage type is not supported on CDS format disks. The same goes for root. From what I can tell in the source code, it looks like swap was inadvertently assumed to have the same constraints as the 'root' usage type, which requires support for a mapped underlying partition directly under

Re: [Veritas-vx] Time of snapshot creation

2007-09-18 Thread Ronald S. Karr
I don't know if you can do that with snapshots. You can do that with checkpoints, though: fsckptadm list /mount/point This should print a line describing the ctime, which is the creation time of the checkpoint. -- Ronald S. Karr tron |-=-|[EMAIL PROTECTED] On September

[Veritas-vx] Veritas doubt

2007-09-18 Thread Goutham N
Hi All, I have a Solaris OS 10 server with VXVM 4.1 installed. SAN is connected from EMC and DGC and once i got EMC powerpath and Navisphere installed vxconfigd is not running. Any suggestions # pkginfo EMCpower system EMCpower EMC PowerPath (Patched with 5.0.1_b025) # uname -a SunOS